how words are helpful to develop our thoughts
Answers
Answer:
it helps us by communicating and it is useful when we dont know the words and if we speak a new word a day we can learn a word and it is useful to us
Answer:
mark as brainliest
Explanation:
Every word, every action, has it’s impact.
Our words define us. The words we use echo our thoughts and drive our daily actions. As the great poet Ursula K. Le Guin put it,
“Words are events, they do things, change things. They transform both speaker and hearer; they feed energy back and forth and amplify it. They feed understanding or emotion back and forth and amplify it.”
Our words create our mindset. Our words reflect the view we have of ourselves. The energy they carry has the potential to either drain or empower us. With each word we use, we have the opportunity to reinforce and strengthen our identity.
The prolific thinker Ralph Waldo Emerson wisely told us, “a man is what he thinks about all day long.”
Is there any better definition of who we truly are? And is there any reason not to use this knowledge to improve our life?
No Thought Is Singular
As the great Stoic philosopher and Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius once said, “our life is what our thoughts make it.” Our words reflect our thoughts. They determine our actions. Given the magnitude of their impact, most of us are surprisingly cavalier about the ones we choose.
Linguist Charles J. Fillmore developed the concept of semantic framing, stating that we think, largely unconsciously, in terms of conceptual frames. Each thought is related within a structure. In this way, every thought, every word, is interrelated within a larger perspective.
The words we choose are not a single use entity, to be forgotten the moment they’ve left our mouth. They have a lasting impact on our overall perspectives. They effect how we see the world. And they influence how we see ourselves.
There are few easier changes that can have such a profound impact on our lives. With each one, we gain the opportunity for a new perspective on life.
As I’ve written before, one of the benefits of writing is taking the time to better notice the details of my daily actions. It was this insight which helped me recognize the caustic nature of my current words. And it also helped me stay on point with improving a number of them.
Here’s eight changes that have helped me. I doubt all eight will apply to everyone. But maybe one might help you see the world, and yourself, a little differently.
No Time vs Not a Priority
Our schedules are packed. There’s never enough time for everything that we want to do. And usually the first things we cut are time for exercise, time for personal development, and time with our families.
We resolve to make changes and find more time. But there never seems to be any time to find. Rarely are we able to stumble across an undisclosed cache of free time on our schedule.
The reality is that we’ll never find time. We need to make time. We need to recognize our priorities and give them the time that they deserve.
So instead of saying “you don’t have the time,” try saying “it’s not a priority.”
Don’t tell me you don’t have time to go to the gym. Say you aren’t going to exercise today because you decided your health isn’t a priority.
Don’t tell me you need to work late and don’t have time for your family. Say that today your family isn’t a high enough priority.
Your actions are already saying it. You might as well be honest with yourself.
And if this makes you uncomfortable, consider making a change to your priorities.